Expert Profile

Expert photo David Wei
Since October 2007, chief executive officer and executive director of Alibaba.com;   From November 2006 to September 2007, president of Alibaba.com and executive vice president of Alibaba Group;   From 2002 to 2006, president of B&Q China, a subsidiary of King

Konaxis Newsletter Subscribe

We offer below content category for subscribe newsletter. Please fill in your name and email address.

 


 
 Select All
 China News  China Facts  China Trade Fairs
 How-to  China Products
 
Newsletter Language: English French Spanish



Currency Convert Service

Currency i have:
Currency i want:
 
How much i want:
That is what i get:
 


Weather

Shanghai,China


Now
28.png
Mostly Cloudy
33°C, Windchill: 33°C
Wind: 21 kph SE
Humidity: 59%
Visibility: 0 km
Preasure: 1,009 mb steady
Sunrise: 5:31 am
Sunset: 6:16 pm
Fri
28.png
Mostly Cloudy
Hi: 32°C, Low: 27°C
Sat
30.png
Partly Cloudy
Hi: 32°C, Low: 27°C

Sourcing In China


To ensure the intermediary and the follow-up of your purchases in China: Search for supplier, factory auditing, negotiation, sampling, production follow-up, quality control, logistics

Meili



You are planning a trip to China? Buy in China?
Meili, your online assistant, answers to all your questions and helps you organize your trip to China.

Find an interpreter in China

Translate a document in Chinese

Rent a car in China

Facts & Figures In China

Foreigners' Share Down In Total Investment In China
In 1996 foreign investment (not including Hong Kong and Taiwan) represented 8.2 percent of total investment in China. In 2008, the most recent year for which figures are available, it was 4.9 percent, according to Roland Berger Strategy Consultants.
 

China Products

14 Bottle Wine Cooler Box

    
14 Bottle Wine C......

China's Best Blogs And Sites

On Accounting - auditing - finance - admin.
China Economics Blog
China Challenges
The China Sourcing Blog
Bull In A China Market
World Bank Raises China Economic Growth Forecast
Accounting - auditing - finance - admin. China 06/29/2009

The World Bank, in its  China Quarterly Update, raised its forecast for China's 2009 gross domestic product (GDP) growth from 6.5 to 7.2 per cent , saying there was an  apparent success of the government's stimulus package as shown by the improved business  outlook from March, when  the 6.5 per cent growth forecast was made. 

However, the bank  does not see yet a sustainable recovery, despite the state's Rmb4,000bn ($590bn, €420bn, £365bn) fiscal stimulus, adding that Beijing might have little room for additional measures this year.

Growth would be strongly supported this year, but "there are limits to how much and how long China's growth can diverge from global growth based on government-influenced spending", said Ardo Hansson, the bank's lead economist for China. "It is too early to say a robust, sustained recovery is on the way."

The bank  also predicts that  China's fiscal deficit will climb to almost 5 per cent of GDP this year, well above the 3 per cent budgeted by Beijing, due to falling government revenues and rapidly rising  expenditures.  This year’s fiscal deficit is  a large jump from last year's deficit of 0.4 per cent.

"On current projections, it is not necessary, and probably not appropriate, to add more traditional stimulus in 2009," said Louis Kuijs, senior economist and main author of the quarterly update released yesterday. "One reason is that the fiscal deficit is on course to be significantly higher than budgeted this year and additional stimulus now would reduce the room for stimulus in 2010."

Market-based investment and consumption are unlikely to rebound until the rest of the world starts to recover convincingly and the collapse in Chinese exports is reversed. Chinese exports fell by about a quarter in the first five months of the year from the same period a year earlier.

China's economy grew 6.1 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter, faster than any other leading country but below the official full-year 8 per cent target. The World Bank said it expected the economy to grow 7.7 per cent in 2010, much slower than the 13 per cent in 2007 and 9 per cent last year.


 

Bookmark and Share